Sunday, April 12, 2020

Sermon: Easter Sunday - 2020



12 April 2020

Text: Mark 16:1-8

In the name of + Jesus.  Amen.

Christ is risen!  He is risen indeed!  Alleluia!

Christians have been greeting each other this way for hundreds of years.  It is said in every language.  And it summarizes the entire Christian faith in a way that has become how Christians say “hello” to each other.

For Adam and Eve rebelled against God’s plan.  Tempted by the devil, they thought only of themselves.  And their sin brought death into the world, and everything else that goes along with it: the struggle for survival, conflicts, violence, and yes, even viruses.  None of this is God’s will.

But for us fallen men, and for the gift of our salvation, God took  flesh for our rescue.  He kept the Law for us.  He fulfilled God’s plan for us.  He overcame the temptations of the devil for us.  He did not think of Himself, but in love obeyed His Father and He saved us!  He conquered death for us at the cross.  And His rising from the dead is a both a victory lap, and a preview for what is to come for us!

That first Easter morning, the Marys went to the tomb expecting to find a body.  Instead, they found an angel who told them not to be afraid, who told them that Jesus had risen, who told them to send word to the apostles who would break the news, the Good News, to the whole world.

For indeed, to this day, the whole world is afraid.  The whole world is confronting death.  The whole world needs to hear the Good News that Jesus left His tomb empty, so that ours too will be empty.

And no matter what some may say, the services of the Church are “essential services,” for we have the Medicine of Immortality, and we have the Good News to share with a frightened and dying world, even as we Christians boldly and joyfully greet one another:

Christ is risen!  He is risen indeed!  Alleluia!

Amen.

In the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

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